NEW YORK TIMES NEWS SERVICE

I See a, r:

SSU TAKES THE ADMISSION OFFICE TO THE STUDENTS! SSU's aggressive admission policies get a boost from this "mobile admissions officen which will travel central Illinois providing "information and assistance" to students interested in enrol 1ing in the fall. SSU's enrollment for the 1972-72 year is down from last year, and new admis- sions have been be1ow anticipations. Shown with the camper/off ice are Jeff Davis, SSU Adrnisslons officer, and Kathy Boldoni, a student.

INSIDE- SSU FALL CLASS SCHEDULE -",5y5 PAGE TWO JULY 18, 1972

IF WE'RE. PULUffi OVI OF PRoTmIvE e4KwmeAm SOUTHEAST ASIA WHAT bWlON,'f WE WISWING THE SOMEWWAREW KIND OF JUSTIRES OUR BOMBING Gc3TTii EDTECT CUR COUNT~YSIDGW17H NW?,f OF INNOCENT CIVILIANS? TROOPG- SOME BODY^ DZFOUANTS !! IS Q WNDTO GET HURT.! 7H#I Nec~Y?

Bus worth TELL IT BVT ?UlWOF THE. AW, K GIVES GOO0 m0.t WW'S 113 of fees? REFUGEES OUR POLICI€S 'EM A CHANCE HAPPENED 70 70 HANOI! CREME --HUNDREDS OF 70 GET OUT AND HUMAN DECENCY?! 7HQ4SANWS HOMiksS,.. TRAVEL-MEET P \1m11 CArcCf 9

There now is a proposal pending before the SSU Assembly, to create a "study" of trans- portation between the present SSU camus,and the new downtown campus. What is being pro- posed is that a bus be subsidized out of ac- tivity funds. The problem arises when one notices that over $4,000 is being asked for one quarter. This works out to be well over one-third of the activity budget for the fa11 quarter. If the program is considered feasible, it THE SPECTRUM is an inaepenoenr newspaper by and for the will take over a third of the entire budget academic community of Springfield, published each Thurs for the year--some $16,000! day during the year except holidays by UNIVERSITY PUB We also hear that there is little time to LICATIONS, Postoffice Box 711, Springfleld 62705. All correspondence should be addressed to the above box. study a1 ternatives-another "crushing imper THE SPECTRUM is distributed free to all college student itive" lowered upon us. In Springfield at the three colleges and to the people We feel that since students had no voice of Springfield at various business places. in the choosing of .the downtown site, with THE SPECTRUM is a member of the New York Tlmes N e w s Service, the College Press Service, Dispatch News Ser- its inherant transportation .pvoblems, then vice International, and the Pacific News Service. THE the administration should arrance transpor- SPECTRUM is published independently of any college ad- tation downtown. ministration in Illinois, and therefore no college or university .Is responsible for the publication of THE It is quite unfair; however, to ask stu- SPECTRUM. However, SPECTRUM wi 11 not be responsible dents to give up activities to fund a bus. for anythlng they do, either. Especially without some sign from the stu- ALL OPINIONS expressed are those of the staff and management of SPECTRUM except the signed apinion a n d dents that they want a bus system at all. comnentary columns, which are generally the opinlon of The project has originated with the admin- the writer and have not been substantiated as fact. We istration, and we doubt if the interest war- solicit all viewpoints, and will make space available upon request. SSU Press room Telephone: 786-6767. rants the high proportion of student funds 1972 SPECTRUM STAFF d EDITORS: going to support a bus. EDITOR L PUBLISHER JOHN R. ARMSTRONG We hope this issue has full public airing WINAGING EDITOR JOHN C. SCATTERGOOD before any decision is made; and that any EXECUTIVE EDITOR IRA J. LIONTS SPORTS EDITOR MIJG- - - - GRIM- . .. . such bus system has the support and backing ASSOCIATE EDITOR WILLIAM "PO" WATERS of many students before the money is spent. SENIOR EDITOR PHIL BRADLEY Innovation at SSU seems to be getting t h e "1 dmao what he dld with the stuff, officer, but he was ADVERTISI~GMANAGER BRUCE McINTYRE smoking sumetbing awful wferd a moment ago." CIRCULATION MANAGER BOB PRIESTER students to pay for things that are admin- COMPOSITION MANAGER CHERI ARMSTRONG istration responsibility at other school: Hub e r t's farewe 11

by James Reston (C! 1972 New York Times News Service not understand the political tradition of heart he knew it. (MIAMI BEACH)- American politics is a sav- Minnesota. The politicians come to power This campaign of 1972 was merely his last age business. The winners here at Miami early in Minnesota. Floyd Olson, Harold tragic effort to recoup his losses. If Beach, 'like George McGovern, have more to Stassen, Joe Ball, and many others were all Richard Nixon could come back from his loss do than they can remember, and the losers, national figures, like Humphrey, in their to Kennedy in the Presidential campaign of 1i ke Hubert Humphrey, have more to forget early 301s, and the present Governor of 1960 and his .loss to Pat Brown for the gov- than they can bear. Minnesota, Gov . Wendel 1 R. Anderson, who is ernorship of California in 1962, then may- 1:umphrey couldn't quite make it through here in Miami Beach, looks young enough be Hubert could do it in 1972, or so he be- his last Presidential farewell on televi- to be a graduate student or even agile 1ieved. sion. It was easier for Ed Muskie. As the enough to be a tight end on the Minnesota ;t was an understandable but fatal per- frontrunner at the beginning, Muskie almost Vikings. sonal blunder. He not only lost himself, seemed relieved by his defeat at the end. but as the titular head of the Democratic &t Humphrey was close to tears. party whose responsi hility was to unite the fk mntrast between Humphrey's and Mus- Democrats, he divided them, destroyed Mus- kie'. concessions to McGovern here is iv kie by cutting int the moderate Democratic teresting.. Muskie'~defeat in this ca vote, and hurt McGo. Irn in the end by at- paign was a personal disappointment, but tacking him as an irresponsible "radical ." not a personal tragedy. ;e will all see his charges against McGov- :'e came into national politics compara- ern on the Republican TV political commer- ~ivelylate in 1ife--a Democrat in the Re- cials later in the campaign. publican state of Maine. His personal life No wonder, then, that Hubert Humphrey was and ambitions were formed as a small-town a little emotional at the end. He desper- 1awyer long- before he became a Governor or ?tely wanted another chance to defeat ~ixon Senator, let alone a vice-presidential can- and telt that only in the White House could didate in '68 or a front-runner for the he redeem the promises of his long progres- Presidency in 1972. Oddly, the pri'ncipal figures o'f Minnesota sive political life, but he lost all that Therefore, he had few dreams of national politics all rose and faded fast, except in Chicago four years ago and knew it, but grandeur, and could withdraw from the bat- Humphrey. He stayed the course better than was determined not to believe it. i:le here in Miami Reach with grace and even them a1 1--and produced more effective pro- So Humphrey goes out now with the rest of relief. . ressive legislation than a1 1 of them com- the old guard, and it's probably right, hut Humphrey was quite different. He spent t ined--but he stayed too long. it's a little hard. Thfs chnvention has his maturing years in the political pit as iiubert Humphrey didn't lose the Democra- been rough on the old geezers who kept the Mayor of Minneapolis, and like President tic Presidential nomination here in Miami Democrats in power through one of the qreat Beach; he lost it in Chicago in 1968. And chapters in American history. They didn't Nixon, member of Congress, leader of ns: tional political battles, Vice President he lost in Chicago because he was more even give Mayor Daley a seat behind the and loser for the Presidency by the nar- faithful to Lyndon Johnson on Vietnam than post in this hall, and even it that was rowest of margins. he was to his own deepest beliefs about the good pol itics--which is doubtful --it was Nobody can understand Humphre.~who ddes war, and that finished him, and in his bad manners. PAGE THREE JULY 18, 1972' The Nixon-Mitchell papers j

by Russel 1 Baker ing, when the last television set in Amer- (C) 1972 New York Times News Service ica has been turned off, you take a vote. the party is settled by lawyers in smuky (MIAMI BEACH)- i'ere is a letter somebody The side that wins jeers at the side that rooms instead of politicians in smoky rooms?" left in an unsealed envelope which was loses. And then the side that loses says "Exactly," he said. dropped in the lobby. of the Atilla the Hun it is going to bolt the party. That is the Well, Dick, speaking frankly, I see no- Hotel & Solarium Club Beach Palace: new pol itics ." thing wrong with that. You and I are law- Dear Dick , Dick, ifthat is the new politics, then vers. I am tempted to say "better lawyers As you suggested, I put on my Paul Mc- what Barry and Nelson and a1 1 the rest of than politicians," but I know how you re- Cartney wig, a rented mustache and some you were doing in San Francisco in 1964 lish your reputation for political acuity. blue jeans which Kleindienst got for me was the new politics, and my advice would The third man I stopped was a particularly from one of the prison laundries, took a be to forget it. wild looking bird. Almost certainly a col- plane to Miami and checked into the Attila ;!owever, I didn't want to take one man's 1ege professor, I though t to mysel f , as I the Hun Hotel & Solarium Club Reach Palace word for it, so I asked another. held him with my glittering eye and rented after explaining to Martha that it was mustache. really more in the nature of a vacation, "stop, my good man," I said.I1and tell me which I really needed, than a continuation what the n-ew-politics is.'' of my political work. "T haven't the time," he said. "Nor for As you further suggested, I started im- that matter, the knowledge. The truth is mediately to try to find an answer to the that I am not a politician, but a professor question, what is the new politics? This I of mathematics and computer science." did by posting myself obtrusive1y Letween Tn the new pol itics, it seems, disagree- the entrance to the High Colonic Room(Danc- ment about who should he allowed to speak ;ng Nightly to the Tunes of Irving Berlin) for the people--a disagreement we often and a bronze victory bust of the Emperor have, as you know, even in the old poli- Caracalla, or possibly Louis XIV, and ad- tics, not to mention the middle-aaed noli- dressing various persons among the thou- tics:-the argument is settled by mat'hema- sands of hairy and dangerous-looki ng radi- tical formulas so complex that they can be calswhopass thatpointinthelobby at solved only by professors or arithmetic. a1 1 hours of the day and night. "Look," this chap told me, "the new po- Tn short, Dick, the new politics is no- The answers were almost as curious as the litics is when you say, 'we're sick and thing more than the old mathematics. You people who uttered them. tired of having the fate of the party set- can do as you like, of cours--you always "Look," one young man told me, "the new tied by politicians in smoky rooms, so we're do--but I think we should leave it to the politics is when you want to change the aoina to qo to the people. ' And then, after Dyocrats. You know professors as well as world, and the other guys want you to leave you'ce gone to the people, it turns out-- 1 do. the world alone. What do you do? You write what Off now for an orange-juice-and-coconut as usual--that nobody knows for sure Gymnasium. a plank in the political platform. It says, the people want. But you've got a lot of husk rubdown in the new Luau ':'e are going to change the world.' conf 1i cting evidence. My best to Pat. "Then you go to a big public .hall you've 'So you call in a lot of lawyers and they (Signed) John. rented, where there are a lot of television look at all the evidence, and tell you what P.S. If Spiro could see all this hair down here he would go right off the scope. cameras and you sit there all night arguing. it means and, therefore, what the party can 2- 'I *+*.******* Should the party declare that it's going 00. to change the-world, or shouldn't it? "Are you saying," Iasked this fellow, That is the entire letter. Will the own- "About three or four o'clock in the morn- "that the new politics is when the fate of er please claim it? The new breed, and the old

by Tom Wicker night (C) 1972 New York Times News Service form amendments droned away Tuesday too; ask the South Caroiina women sacri- (MIAMI BEACH, FLA. )- On the morning after at prime-time television hours, the dele- f iced by the McGovern forces, in the tense the full California delegation was restored gates hot only stayed put and even seemed par1i amentary maneuvering over delegate to Sen. George S. McGovern, Assemblyman Mil. to pay attention, but when Yvonne Burke-- seating. And Sam Rayburn himself in the 1ie L. Brown, the impressive young .black the "vice chairperson" who has been one of bld days, never railroaded through a du- the stars of this convention--final ly began hious vote more forcefully than Mrs. Curke who is one of its leaders, was praising the calling for voice votes, the new breed de- Californians for their cooperation and did, in refusing to permit a roll call on cohesiveness in the floor fight the night legates sprang alertly into life and over- the minority tax plank, despite an obviously before. helmed the Wallace men. inconclusive voice vote. " I even got a note from John Tunney , who But if its hard-!.carking attitude has dis- Moreover, the new poli tics has made no has a gallery pass," Brown said. That got a tinguished this Democratic gathering from visible difference in the way McGovern has big laugh from the assembled blacks, chi- the boozy, blowhard, unrully sessions of dangled the Vice Presidenty in front of var- canes, whomen and other political newcomers years gone by, with their delays and con- ious power blocs and personalities. From in the California caucus; their junior U- fusions, there has been no lack of the po- the float of Leonard Woodcock's name be- nited States Senator, an early Muskie sup- litical professionalism.that the old party "ore the disgruntled labor bosses to the qorter, had not even been able to get oh wheelhorses used to think belonged to them. Cthrric and religious hints (Senators Eagle- the convention floor while his state's re- Not since the Garner deal put F.D.R. over ton or Muskie might hold the Catholic vote; -resentation was being settled. the top in *32 has, there been a smoother Tenator Ribicoff might placate Jews wor- "We offered to do anything he could," operation ,than the McGovern team's mani pu- ried about the fate of Israel), the vice- Brown quickly added, stilling the laughter. lation of the vote on the South Carolina presidentia1 maneuvering has been distinctly "It was a nice gesture." Whereupon the Cal- seatina dispute; and no so-called 'proUever deja vu and mostly smokescreen-- a1 though ifornia caucus gave Sen, Tunney a nice denied,more blandly than the McGovern lead- Gov. Reubin Askew has been on every McGov- round of applause in absemtia. Ers that they had done any such thing, to ern list since the Florida primary. That is as good an example as any of the the confusion of the television networks. Thus, if there is anything more striking strangely mixed spirit of this convention-- And .a 1though the McGovern forces 1ost the here than the decorum and industry of the old politics amid the new, professional op- two thirds vote required for the passage of reform delegates, it is that the new poli- erations bolstering idealism, dead earnest- the McGovern-backed solution of the dispute tical leaders around McGovern have shown ness restraining youthful exuberance. Per- on Mayor Richard J. Dal ey 's delegation, they themselves tough, smart and political, as haps it is the latter that has most im- adroitly put the Mayor and his supportes in people who manage a Presidential nomination pressed those who have attended the boi- the position of having refused to compromi se always have to be, while the old pros, with s terous Democratic conventions of recent --thus confounding the mythology that only few exceptions, have bumbled and fumbled years. the old pros know how to give and take. into such so-called debacles as Muskfe's Young and bearded though many of them may The old politics is plainly in evidence, torlorn last-minute proposal to end the be, and however these unknown men and delegate dispute in a smoke-filled room. farm workers and college professors and stu- As for the barons of labor, ensconced in dents may be derided as amateurs, the dele- their suites at the Americana Hotel, they ' gations produced by the reform guide1 ines have shown themselves to be the only real have stuck grimly to their business. At spoilers in town. Unable by hook, crook or 6:30 a.m. on Wednesday, when the intermin- power play to boss their own men into mom- able platform debate staggered to a close, ination, and long after Sen. Hubert H. Hum- Chairman Larry O'Brien estimated in some- phrey and Muskie had bowed out w;i% rela- thing 1i ke wonderment that 95% of the dele- tive grace, they still were mumblirVJ gates were still in their seats;whoever saw threats and recrimindtions around their such a thing on a mere platform debate? frayed cigars--elephants on the way to the Earlier in that session, as the discussion boneyard, determined to take their party of Gov. George C. Wallace's lengthy plat- with them.

PAGE FIVE JULY 18, 1972

Draft resisters resist prison

by Steven V. Roberts jectors. Angel es . (C) 1972 New York Times News Service The question of amnesty for draft re- In Kentucky, most judges continue to mete (LOS ANGELES)- Two years ago, Alan Kent was sisters has become a political issue in the out f ive-year sentences, and last summer, drafted. Halfway through his physical Presidential year. The Democratic platform the United States Court of Appeals for the exami nation at the Oakland induction cen- , comni ttee has approved a plank that states Sixth Circuit, in Cleveland, criticized ter, he decided that he did not want to "our firm intention to declare an amnesty, one district judge for his "mechanical sen- join the Army. on an appropriate basis, when the fighting tencing" procedures. During the lunch break, he went across has ceased and our troops and prisoners . Many judges still give jail terms to mi- li tant leaders of the draft resistance .move- the street to a draft counseling center, and have returned. " ment and to defendants who appear insincere the man on duty advised him to resist in- President Nixon told an interviewer in duction. Later that afternoon, just before January: "I,for one, would be very li- or frivolous. And even in California, a his physical examination was over, Kent beral with regard to amnesty, but not while ,few judges insist on sending all resisters handed his papers to another draftee and there are Americans in Vietnam fighting to prison. walked out of the induction center. to serve their country and defend their As a result, the whole process is,a lit- Eventual ly, he was convicted of violating country, and not while P.O.W. 's are held tle like Russian roulette. the Selective Service Act. But instead of by North Vietnam. After that we will con- In general, however, the trend is clearly going to Federal prison, he was placed on 'sider it, but it would have to be on a bas- toward more liberal practices. P survey of judges, lawyers and probation officers probation and ordered to do work of 'I na - is of their paying the price, of course, tional importance" for two years. that anyone should pay for violating the inadozenstatespoints tothe following Today, Kent, now 23 years old, spends at law." reasons : least 20 hours a week as a volunteer at/ The price being paid in the Federal courts Pub1 ic attitudes toward the Vietnam war and the draft have shifted drastically. Brige Over Troubled Waeers, a drug rehabi- ' changed sharply between 1967, when only litation program in Berkeley. The volun- 10.4% of those convicted in draft cases Judge Fred M. Winner of Denver said that teer work fulfills the tens of his proba- recei.ved probation, while the rest went to his own views-did not influence his deci- tion while he holds a steady job at a steel jail, and 1971, when 62.7% received proba- sions but added, "Iam, however, cognizant fabricating plant. tion. thatthepublicrsviewsonthewar have His case is one example of how the Fed- The percentage of- defendants who were con- changed, and I take that into considera- tion." eral judiciary in recent months has gradu- victed dropped from 75.1 to 34.8 during ' - ally but dramatically reversed its policies the same period. And draft counselors have Judges have decided that many draft in the handling of draft cases. A growing become so astute that, according to some boards are too cursory or too strict in number of judges .are, in effect, defying estimates, 90% of the young men who resist refusing appl ications for conscientious ob- draft boards and Federal prosecutors and induction never even get to court. jector status. They have also been deeply granting amnesty to draft resisters,, on the The most sweeping changes have occurred impressed with the intelligence and sin- condition that they perform the kind of pu- in the major metropolitan areas, such as cerity of many of the defendants who come blic service required of conscientious ob- New York, Chicago, San Francisco and ~0s before them.

11 ThmAnuhMkbnum baon 1-lOuorr(N). 16 PdIlM?hil&y: Tlu Malw dlhlUk lnmul C BI- Mw IU Pdlllul w-1 r* PdIwaY 24 Ouantluuw Metho& In h. hhnlord -1 collrn - 111 lunnlh Dlllnqumr 15 Admlnlslr.lton of Publk Sv~lmnIn an AC dGi&r*T- Comb 7. IOTWL IN)' 112 Symwk lnurwum 18 Eraluatlm of hblk Amncr PIorrma 7- 1OThun (N)* 188 Soclal Conupu In PIrW rdltical Economy of irchndqkChllp Zf. 1-lo Wd. (N). 119 The Soclolw afB*hwlnrYdnluIh C1mpri~'71IElrctoral BIhniw (1015 0u.W D. E".nn An. 193 lures In Populal(on: I-ThmCn- Llnkagr Pditlrr (I): American Pdltlcd Pads D. Evsnn 8:)s- 1O:lOMWf jurtke and the Slate: Polldrll ObllgaUm dCMDbddhca I Golden 10:40.ll:4OTLTh TkAfr-Amrtlcul Sruth falustlcr: An Exad~ruUadh- W COLLOQUIA Pdltlral7hlnkin[ Thrwlh a Comld.raUm MIIrLAutob(.lnph*r Golden 1110-215 MWF 3:05 5:05 M6F Tha Urban Plannlnt Procru n.ustn - GENERAL nnnln[ and the Pdlllral h- In h. UhEm*anml Heulsar &40.6:49 T6Th brlc Resrarth Methods In PuMlc Aflaln Imbrm 1.1OThun (N). 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Enrlronmenlai Psv~holon 7- lOTurr(N)* C 11:45 1:OOMWF Human lnformrtlon Procrdng I:W. 1O:W MLW (N) C 11:45-1:WMWF Learnlnl and Mcmw 10:50- 12:OS MWF Soorl P~vchdon 10:20...... II:?SMWC. . .-...... PUBLIC POLICY ISSUES Prvchodraml I: M.hd1 hT&~dqu 5:50.7:50ThTh (N) Human DevelopmrnlSlmlnsr 1 (2 qu. hn) 7 - 10 Wed. INI. A New Cat1NU.n fw AIIY*ll mom Pr~fr%slm.lIndlvid~al Human Dmlop-I 10:io- 11:ioimt hofrdmd hwtlua.4 hYkAM C Bnm Grwp Protrdurn with Prtkno Ex*-- 7.10Mon. (NI* hblk Pdlry for Innah Drnhof lndmr8dual Penen~lltyTestin[ 7- 1OT- (NI* Wtlfan Reform Ma* Enmk# hvchohistwv: An Orrrrlrw 1:40.1:55 MWF U1b.n Publk PdW' Srk- Ind8rldu.l Intrlllpnce Testin[ 7.1OTun (HI. ~411orulham role W.hrlm Nwlophv%idonI 1~50.5:wTArn hdnrn ma hblkAN.* wahv P,*tM0d~.l T"1, and MtaMnW 1- 1OTu.r IN). Blrkr md lh. C~IV MIIW ?In(In Cww D..VIwU.O) Avrn hvrloomrntal Child hvchdw 7-1OThun (N)* Eronomlcs of elwk Am.*. 6" Cwnhurlptia) Bormm Indu~~rIaIP,vthdon 1. lowrd. IN). Educat8on: Svrum. Trrkn. dMSMenllLr Corn-1 Breluh 0.Y- 1250- 1:50ThTh Inunwld ~ommunk.tlmr (k.Cwrv &rlpt(on) Funk 11:15. 1:30MWF Uvll 171th- Mme~nt(a. CwwDnulpUm) iuwm S:50- >SO M4W (11) iuW AN. SOCIOLOGY AND ANWROIOLOG~ AN. AN. 2 Awrkm Famllio: A Ch&*hm M A w. 1 hdmlorul0uu~U.n Mk.r 4' Organ~rr~sonThrov Alllm 8 WS Semlnrr: Prepl. I1Wqvk Aven, MwEm.--.& H~hrr(*r. MILLnnbw8 7 - 10 wed. fN)* 1 10 Wed. (Nl* 9 Isrun in khntBehavior Barlow - TUITION: 1220. 2:lOTLTh 10 Puni~wnland Social SlwUn Barlow 1:40-2:55 MWF FUtL TIMF (12+ Hours) 18 mnamicr of Famolv InaruUa Burnell 12:lS-1:30MWF 21 Community D~vrlopmrnlIn thmTMd Wdd Carlev ~esldents: $134.00. Cloak 10:10- 11:35 MWF 11 The Contlnuln# Evolution of Hwan GmldCulud Sysrm: Cn We L FIN?(() 11:10.2:10T6Th Nan-Res. : $355.00 V~rlat~onsIn Human Adapl.lim: Tmuu1W.l Llmarn Cloak 13 9:15 10:40 MWF PART TIME (1-11 Hours) 24 Ou~ntitrllr~Methods In the Bthwlnrll Sclenur 1 Cdllnt - Cornq 1- 1OTu.r (HI. Residents: S12/hour 29 Ownltrtlon Thewv 10:40- 12:4OTkTh 39 Sotla1 P,vthdo#v Draper '3:OO .5:OOThTh Non. Res.: j54'ihour 40 Sll1mr. or the OthrrMlIIwllln ;::;nnb",, c b" 11:50..2:50ThTk ' 4) Iea,

POSITION FOR PART-TIME ATTORNEY

Sangamon State University is undertaking a, unique pilot program to provide legal ser- vices to the entire university community-- faculty, staff and students. The program wi1 1 be funded by the Uni versi ty Governance system, which included representatives from staff, faculty, students and citizens of the Springfield Comnunity. Applications a r e Come to the Cabaret now being taken for a part-time attorney to initiate this program in the Fall Academic by Cheri Armstrong bli nd-to-the-surroundi ngs existence that quarter, 1972. Because of its experinien- bridging the gulf be- tial character, the position will entail CABARET is a seemed to characterize Germany in the early 1 primari ly legal consul tation 'for several tween escapism and harsh reality. In the thirties. movie production of CABARET one becomes en- The music consists of a series of flashes (5-10) hours on campus each week, with lim- meshed in the parallels between the story- to the cabaret scene. The song matter re- ited possibi 1i ties for 1itigation. Expenses will be paid and facilities provided by the line, music line up, and background activi- lates to the correspondinq - went- in Sal- University. tY ly's life. Applications or further inquiries can The story-1 ine concerns an American girl; The background is. pre-World War I1 Ger- be directed to: Douglas Morgan, Chairman Salley Bowles, played by Liza Mine1li.Sally many. It ranges from contempt for the just Cornittee to Provide legal services is an entertainer in the cabaret. She is beginning Nazi party, to its growth in Sangamon State University, caught up in outward rebellion of sexual strength, and ends in the growing terrorist Springfield, I1I., [786-66871 promi scui ty and behavior extravagances to activities against Jews. or: University Assembly office, 786-6674 cover basic hurt at her father's indiffer- CABARET transcends the entertainmenbonlv- ence. purpose of many latter day musicals. I Michael York plays an English tutor pull- still haven't decided whether 1 like it or mmmmmm mmmmmm ed into the lifestyle of Sally and the not. It leaves much to think about. 88888, 888888 MEET THE "G-Q" PROFESSIONALS.. ,. . P Standing: John, John Nudo d Tom 6 hA seated: Portia Rhinoceros' follows rats Movie Notes: "Luckily, I managed to persuade Miss Frank- by A. H. Weiler lin to write the adaptation, and Ossie Da- (C) 1972 New York Times News Service vis to direct," says Savin, who happens to (NEW Y0RK)- If a couple of rats like "Wil- be white. "Louise Stubhs will recreate her lard" and "Ben" can make a killing at the bri11 iant performance as the heroine's box office, what's to stop a respectable strong-wil led mother, and gloria Edwards "Rhinoceros" from following suit? Nothing and Loretta Green will also repeat their at all, and that's why American Film Thea- stage roles. We've signed a 17-year-old ter--a joint venture of Columbia Pictures, newcomer, Petty Pettitt, to play the title the American Express Company and the Ely role, and Brock Peters wi'll act her father. Landau Organization--has purchased Eugene Leslie Uggams and Claudia McNeil will be IonescoIr irreverent comedy that was a tri- seen in other roles." - - umph of the 1961 Broadway season. And add- ******** ing a good news to good news, they have What do ybu connect with after you've con- "The European Touch" signed Zero Mostel to recreate his brilli- nected with "The French Connection"? If ant stage performance and Tom O'Horgan to you're producer Phi 1ip D' Antoni you connect direct, with shooting to begin here in Oct- with "The Seven Ups," a hardhitting gang- rber. ster yarn. And then, just to do yourself one better, you decide to direct the film, Continental MmsHakstyling American Film Theater is something new .under the cinematic sun: a movie-of-the- as we1 1 as produce. Twentieth Century-Fox, 0 A ,month club that will make brand-new adap- the company cashing in so handsomely on & 507 SOUTH GRAND EAST+&ONE 544-681 7 & tations of stage works available to its "The French Connc!ction," wi 11 a1so sponsor subscribers each month. The plan is for a "The Seven Ups," as well as "Terman Order," film to play an initial engagement of .two ?n original screenplay by Howard Miller a- days in at least 500 theaters around the bout the life and death in a futuristic pen- country, with the choice seats going to sut al colony which D'Antoni will produce af- scribers. The remaining seats will be solc ter "The Seven Ups." on a f irst-come-f irst served basis . w-*++*.n* In addition to "The *RhinocerosM the films Seen any good vampires lately? Try look- on the "movi e-of-the-month" docket include: ing in Brooklyn. Heights. In "Vampire ," John Osborne's "Luther," to be directed by 7n original story by Frank Spiering, a marc Guy Green; Harold Pinter ' s "The Homecoming ,'I ried couple discover a vampire who makes with Peter Hall directing a cast headed by himself comfortably at home in the base- Ian Holm, Vivien Merchant and Michael Jay- !lent of their Brooklyn Heights mansion. ston; OINeill 's "The Iceman Cometh," star- "The f ilm wi 11 be a comedy-mel odrama, " (Spiering said the other day. "In order to ADULT BOOKS MAGAZINES NOVEL1 IES ring Lee Marvin under the direction of John Frankenheimer; an updated version of ?lo1 - ;get rid of the vampire, the couple has to *-*- *-*- nartr "Lil iom," written by Charles Gordone :round all previous tenants of the house to and set in Harlem; and Alfred Haye's adap- :attend a party. A gang looking for narco- tation of the Kurt Weil 1-Maxwel 1 Anderson !tics stashed in the basement also joins musical, "Lost in the Stats.' the party, as do some cops who are on their *+****** trail." - '"Black Girl," J. E. Franklin's moving :elected shorst. Joseph Bologna will account of a teen-age girl ' s determination join Cliff Tiorman in Aram Avakian's "Cops to escape the ghetto, was one of 'last' and Robbers " . .. .Walter Pidgeen has been season's most acclaimed off-Broadway plays. added to the cast of "Harry Never Holds," Next week, thanks to independent producer vhi ch .a1ready includes James Coburn, Mich- Lee Savin, it goes before the cameras in ael Sarrazin and Trish Van Devere. Venice, Calif. Bernstein's 'Ma9~' Music by Dona1 Henahan wisdom, cliches, and everybody's conversa- (C) 1972 New York Times NP*** service tion. And in religious myths. The Bern- (NEW Y0RK)- In his Mass ~ara~ardRernstein stein Mass, like few other musical works has tried to ~i Ma A 'ler opera for our ' in history, sets out consciously to em- times. TR~Esgatement could, perhaps, be brace the ordinary and to apotheosize it. ~s~das a club to beat not only Bernstein That it fails to do so is not essentially and Mahler but our times. And yet to what the fault of the musical score itself ,which more important task could any composer to- is a sophisticated, sometimes quite hri1- day adress himself than the one that Mahler liant, pastache of a sort no one but Bern- (who never wrote an opera, of course) spent stein is capable of producing today. his whole career facing up to? Nor does the fault really lie in the ov- Like Mahler and Joyce, and Eliot and most ' er-all conception, which though not en-, other significant 20th-century artists you tirely original (what is) brings into play' might mention--the composer of Mass perceives together in the same-theatrical sandbox. On that there is something divine in the corn- the most obvious level, there is exceptional FULL LENGTH MOTION PICTURE! monplace--in popular song, folk wit and MASS continued to page 7 ties have been given a meaning beyond their MASS From page 6 obvious current worth in the world. When Mahler quotes a German parade-ground tune promise in the purposeful mingling and con- in the middle of a symphonic paragraph, we fusion of Christian and Hebraic ritualistic are jarred by the commonplace, but it trig- elements. When the Celebrant,from atop a gers uncommon emotional reactions; when long flight of steps, fin'ally becomes re- Mass quotes the commonplace, as in its re- volted at the profane cavortings of his current allusions to the style of fiftyish tribe below, he descends in wrath, smashing musicals, we are unmoved, simply because the monstrance and calice he holds, and what surrounds the a1 lusion is itself too everything else within reach. depressingly commonplace. An immediate parallel can be drawn with ..hatever we or later observers may de- the Old Testament scene of Moses smashing cide nothing can diminish the significance the tablets to bring the golden calf .orgy of Mass as a major effort by a protean cm- to a halt, and possibly with that of Christ Toser. This sounds 1i ke a work wrenched chasing the money changers. There is a out of the artist almost against his own great deal od such mythic allusion and ri- will, like something he had to do for us, tual transformation in Mass, some it ef~ whether we like it or not. That is admir- fective and some of it putting one in mind able in any artist, of course. Mass is of an adult-'education lecture on the Meta- Bernsteinls attempt to embrace, in one morphosi s of the Gods. tear-stai ned bearhug, us, our children, God, So the employment of mixed spiritual media and our common dilemma. Mahler,whatever he is not the problem. And, musically, the is, will appreciate the effort.

juxtaposition of semingly incongruous -wor1D.mmQA- - styles is not only defensible, but in Bern- -r~rUQmQTr'm PIZZA stein's case inevitab1 e and who1 ly ref1ec- b-~~*'zz& FI . . lnmrmwrrow- tive of his confused time. DINING. ROOM or CARRYQUT '*k.. mi&- OMQ #). PHONE d TAKE I7 Ron Strangely, the. popular elements so gener- EL%- ously folded into the music strike one as Angelos Italian Restaurant -. -= rather dated. A1 though there are a11 usions to rock in instrumentation and in the lyric, a genuine rolling rock is not to be heard, e- even in the well-mannered orgy scene . that / in ChlcaNo \ causes the Celebrant to break down and 60 First r start smashing the ritual furniture. In Class fact, Bernstein and his collaborators in Mass show a great reluctance to touch the !SAVE 50%! raunchier popular idiom, choosing to skit- ter about its edges in a manner that ex- \ on Weekends I poses the musical feebleness of their ver- wqi. ~II~OU!~Sun/ sion of rock without ever coming to grips with rock's vulgar vitality.: But You Must Present This Ad When Registering. But, even when used as parody, the cli- --\ You'll llke the entire weekend. Advance ches of commercial musical theater of the Pick-Congress, one of resewations are required. sixties will not do to illuminate a subject Chicago's largest, most The 50% weekend rate famous hotels overlooking applies only to individuals, of such pretensions.. Why, in other words, I beautiful Grant Park and and is not valid when try to beat "Hair1' at its own game. Lake Michigan. Close to attending group meetings Loop stores, theatres. or conventions. What cripples Mass at last, however, is entertainment. Your ideal Reservation confirmatlor. TEss its failure to find a workable way to headquarters for a subject to room I weekend of fun in Chicago. availability. Offer expires reconcile popular and classical musical I December 31.1972. traditions than its inabi 1i ty to persuade All 1000 rooms are I air-conditioned and have the sympathetic 1i stener that the banal i- color TV. You'll enjoy excellent food and beverages at moderate rates in a variety of CPrC~ restaurants, cocktail lounges and a coffee shop. ONGRESS Convenient parking. No charae for children under 12 inroom with parents. Michigan Ave. at CogEx. 1 ) All rooms, regardless of Chicago, Illinois 60605 . 1 rate, are 50% less for an Telephone (312) 427-2800 1 SO. 6TH NEXT TO There's so much to do .and see in Chidgo: RAMAoA INN Cuba Qmm. Whlto Sox Qam. Llncoln Park Zoo I Adler Planetarium .Shedd Aquarium m FI.M Mumnn ot Natural Hhtory = Museum of Sclenco & Industry5 ? Excellent Thatre and Concerts. and Much Won. 1 I

Write for FREE BROCHURE, PRICE LISTS, & SAMPLES Please state in tended use for appropriate samples. REFLECTIVE ADVERTISING, INC.

8551 Page Blvd., St. Louis, Mo. 631.14 Phone: 3 14-423.5495 PAGE EIGHT JULY 18, 1972 SSU sports survey

6. Do you have dny suggestion on obtain- by Doug Grim ing a baseball coach? Last week a survey about SSll baseball Yes 46 19.9% NO 186 80.2% fa- - - - - team was taken by students, staff and Some of the suggestion on obtaining a cul ty. The survey consisted of 6 questions. coach are as follows: The numerical resyl ts of the survey were Fifteen to 20 surveys mention having a as follows: student as coach or a player/coach. 1. Did you know SSU has an intercolleg- iate baseball team? Two Students volunteered. They were Jer- ry Adams and Ron O'Shea. SU) %S - 144 - 62.1% NO - 88 - 37.9% 2. Did you know that the coach of the It was felt that with this type of re- team resigned? sponse the Administration, Student Services, Yes - 56 - 24.1% No - 176 - 75.9% or whatever comnittee that deals with sports SOFTBALL HEAVY AT SS U 3. Do you feel that SSU should continue should again look to see ifa SSU inter- to have an intercollegiate team? collegiate baseball team could be continued. Yes - 169 - 72.8% ,No - 44 - 19..0% Other suggestions kere: 1)' have a player The SSU students ,facul ty and staff are Don't Care - 19 -8.2% election of a student player/coach; 2) make again making their weekly sports outing. 4. Did you know that the administration a coach a permanent faculty member; 39 ( Use On July 16, there was a very exciting slow- did not cmit themselves toward the team? one of the graduate students who may have pitch baseball game at Center Park. Yes - 42 - 18.1% No - 185 - 79.7% coaching experience; 4) the Student Ser- There -was also a SSU Picnic and a movie Don't Care - 5 - 2.2% vices fee should cover the having of part- shown that day. The whole day was a great 5. Would you consider having a student time coaches in baseball and other sports. success, with 300 people at the picnic and as the baseball coach? If not, why not provide for this inethe fu- 160 people staying for the movie "The Learn- Yes - 182 - 78.4% No - 38 - 1'6.4% ture fees. 5) Sell baseball decals and ing Tree." r1ontt Care - 12 - 5.2% use the money for college sports, Besides the July 16 outing the university a1so presented its weekly movf e ' Wednesday July 12. This movie was entitled "Adalen 31". Even though the movie had subtitles the 60 people present seemed to enjoy the movie. The Student Services reported that 37 of the 60 people were students and $20 was collected. The movie for July 19 is entitled "Trash" nroduced by Andy Warhol. The movie stares Sports of the times Joe Dal lesandro and Hol ly Woodlawn, together they battle the big city. The slow-pitch softball game was the first event of the day. Teams were chosen and To Olympic glory everyone seemed up for the, game. I wi 11 call the teams the good guys versus the bad guys because the good guys are supposed to win and the bad guys are supposed to lose. The game appeared to be a defensive game with Ted Downey pitching for the good guys vs. this writer pitching for the bad guys. by Arthur Daley (C) 1972 New York Times News Service er with the reputation of a Bob Hayes or But it soon turned out to be a comedy of hyper- Jimmy Hines to dominate the sprints, the errors for the bad guys went the good guys (NEW YORK)- A new Olympic record in bole is unfailingly set every four years relatively unknown dashmen are all of high to a 13 to 4 lead in the fifth inning. quality. But proven quality is a missing But not give up hope the bad guys decided at the conclusion of the tryouts detemi ning United, States repre- ingredient in many of the field events. to get a new pitcher, Nancy, which held the. It may even sound romantic to report that good guys to only 4 hits and no runs. sentatives for this most glittering of in- ternational sports spectacles. Partly from , an 18-year-old kid from During the last two innings, the bad UCLA, won the at 7 feet, 3 inches. guys seemed to have found themselves by force of habit and partly froin the enthus- iasm of the moment, the track nuts soar off Making the.team with him at the same height racking up 7 runs durdnq the last two inn- were, Ron Jourdan and . None of ings; making the final Score good guys into the wild blue yonder and exclaim,"this 13, will be America's greatest 01-vmpic team." those names is exactly a household word.Be- bad guys 11. fore side1 ine observers wax sentimental ov- Some of the outstanding players for The echoes of that' extravagant statement the were still bouncing off the cascade range ?r the noble feat of the infant prodigy, good guys were John Sullivan, first base- it is well to point out that Pat Matzdorf, man, for hitting a homerun. Rill "Froggy" last weekend at the completion of the men's and final Olympic trials at Eugene, Ore. If the holder of the world record, Rey- Watters, catcher, for running nonstop to naldo Brown, most consistent of all 7- second base. Rich Novin, second base at these words had the same emphatic ring to them as similar utterances before in Mexi- footers were jostled off the team. short, for catching a pop fly off one of Many years ago I learned that upsets in his own players' head. Dave Compton, left co City in 1968, Tokyo in 1964, Rome in 1970 and all the others, a note of warning final Olympic tryouts rarely prove produc- field, for a good base running and a very tive. The guy who came from nowhere to important catch. is appropriate. Don't you he1 ieve it. The newly constituted U.S. Olympic squad make the team was riding his adrenalin The outstanding players for the bad guys juices to do so and he usually is unable to were Ted Henry, first, Terry Pritchett, for has many intriguing Pacets. It also has a disturbing number of puzzling ones. A1 recharge them for the Olympics proper.Mean- hitting home runs with men on base; this - while, semewhere back home the 1i kel ier writer for sliding back into second base though it is conceivable that it it still could attain the top rank that the dream- candidate silently curses an unkind fate while Scraping his chinand leg up in the that elitiinated him. process; and Jeff ( Captain America) Lake ers envision, it is much more 1i kely that it won't. This group just doesn't seem to During the Mexican hayride of 1968 the for getting a base hit every time just to have the wall-to-wall solidity so many of United States men's foot racers failed to get forced out at second base everytime. its predecessors had. Far too many names win an event be-yond 400 meters. In the eyes of this reporter I feel that on the team ring be1 1s only with the gen- the player of the week for each team was uine track buffs but are unrecognizable to for the good guys Rich Novinger, for mak- the average sports follower. This is what ing a great catch after it had bounced off gives such an extra element of uncertainty the second baseman's head. While the bad to all pre-Olympic calculations. guys player of the week was Jeff (Captain But before the situation is studied, it America) Lake for getting a hit only to be would be we1 1 to check through all post-war forced out at second base. Olympic Games to measure tne richness of But not to be outdone the Volleyball - en- Lhusiasts got a game together during the Ameri ca s Go1 d Meda 1 harvest . Here are the totals from 1948 on: 11 at London, 14 sof tbal 1 game. Larry M. ,Maggie Sonius, and Cathy Roscetti chose up sides with the at Helsinki, 15 at Melbourne, 9 at Roome912 at Tokyo and 12 at Mexico City. That aver- working girls of the world vs. the SSIJ good people. ages out to an even dozen Olympic champion- The game was very close with the score ships at each set of games for our foot ra- 8 - 7 when they were forced to stop while cers, leapers and hardware heavers. Can the band set up to play. The working girls this nation do that we1 1 agafn? Don't bet on it. Unlike other Olympics who started out on the bottom came out on the United States has only four cinch top with 8. events at Munich--the two relay races, the THe next softball game is to be played 400-meter dash and the high hurdles. It at Lincoln Park at 2:00 p.m. Ifyou want to must be admitted, though, that there are play come on out we can always use new others where the chances of an American vic- talent. tory are probably better than even. In the a1 1 Rumor of the wkhas it that with pole vaul';, for i'nstance, broke thi5 int@~stin sports -that three quarters the world record at 18 feet, 5-3/4 inches be required for a Bachelor's t-jf P.E. will and one 18-foot vaulter couldn't even qual- Degree and 6 quarters wi 11 be required for ify for the team. a Master's Degree. Although this country has no name sprint-